Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Light or Dark

Existence or void.
Light or dark.
Hot or cold.
Warm or cool.
Birth or death.
Growth or decay.
Prey or predator.
Herd or Pride.
Balance or upheaval.
Continuity or chaos.
Survival or destruction.
Adaptable or rigid.
Aware or oblivious.
Clever or dull.
Curious or disinterested.
Intelligent or ignorant.
Wise or foolish.
Right or wrong. 
Good or evil.
God or Devil.
Shepherd or sheep.
Unity or separation.
Trust or fear.
Cooperation or conflict.
Understanding or judgment.
Resolution or resentment.
Progress or regression.
Integration or segregation.
Winner or loser.
Forgiveness or revenge.
Acceptance or hatred.
Reason or rage.
Reduction or escalation.
Peace or war.
Salvation or Armageddon.
Existence or void.
-

-by One Ronin
--

The American Cargo Cult


Please note that these principles are not characteristics of political values -- they are characteristics of people, no matter what political values they hold.  I will add that while these characteristics seem particularly applicable to Americans, I believe they apply equally to all humans, world-wide.


P.S.  Peter, I wanted to contact you for permission, but was unable to find a way.  If this is a problem, please contact me.

----------------------------------



Principles of the Americian Cargo Cult
  by Peter Klauser

I wrote these principles after reflecting on the content of contemporary newspapers and broadcast media and why that content disquieted me.  I saw that I was not disturbed so much by what was written or said as I was by what is not.  The tacit assumptions underlying most popular content reflect a worldview that is orthogonal to reality in many ways.  By reflecting this skewed weltanschauung, the media reinforces and propagates it.

I call this worldview the American Cargo Cult, after the real New Guinea cargo cults that arose after the second world war.  There are four main points, each of which has several elaborating assumptions.  I really do think that most Americans believe these things at a deep level, and that these misbeliefs constantly underlie bad arguments in public debate.





I. Ignorance is innocence
 

    Complicated explanations are suspect...
         ...The world is simple, and there must be a simple 

             explanation for everything.
         ...Certainty is strength, doubt is weakness.
         ...Admitting alternatives is undermining one's 

             own belief.
         ...Changing one's mind means one has wasted the 

             time spent holding the prior opinion.
 

    Your opinion matters as much as anyone else's...
         ...When a person has studied a topic, he has no more 
             real knowledge than you do, just a hidden agenda.

     The herd should be followed...
         ...The contemplative lemming gets trampled.
         ...Popular beliefs must be true.
         ...No bad idea can survive.
         ...People are generally smart.
         ...Even if a popular belief doesn't pan out, at least 

            you'll be in the same boat as everyone else.
 


II. Causality is selectable

     All interconnection is apparent...
          ...Otherwise, complicated explanations 

             would be necessary.

     The end supports the explanation of the means...
          ...A successful person's explanation of the means 

             of his success is highly credible by the very 
             fact of his success.

      You can succeed by emulating the purported behavior 

      of successful people...
          ...This is the key to the cargo cult.  To enjoy the 

              success of another, just mimic the rituals he 
              claims to follow.
          ...Your idol gets the blame if things don't work out, 

              not you.
 

     You have a right to your share...
           ...You get to define your share.
           ...Your share is the least you will accept 

               without crying injustice.
           ...Celebrate getting more than your share.



III. It's not your fault
 

      If it's good for you, it's good...
            ...Society is everyone else.


      Good intentions suffice...
            ...You can always apologize.


      There is no long term...
            ...Don't miss an opportunity.


      Consequences are things that happen to others...
            ...Only you can hold yourself accountable.  

               Don't let others make you do that.

      If somebody starts the blame game, you can still win it...
            ...There are evil people and institutions, and surely 

                one of them is more responsible than you are.

      You are not the problem...
            ...An ugly image means a bad mirror.



IV. Death is unnatural
 

      You're special...
            ...Bad things shouldn't happen to you.
 

      Pain is wrong...
            ...Life should not hurt.
            ...It's a Whiffle World.


      Tragedy is a synonym for calamity...
            ...Bad things are never consequences of 

               one's own action or inaction.

      There will be justice...
            ...Bad people get punished.
            ...You, however, will be forgiven.

__

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Ideas and Dogma

 Excerpt from Tom Robbins' book, Still Life with Woodpecker

"Ignoring the possibility that in the wrong hands almost any object… can turn up as Exhibit A in a murder trial… it is still safe to say that objects, as we understand them, are stable, whereas ideas are definitely unstable:  They not only can be misused, they invite misuse; and the better the idea the more volatile it is.

"That’s because only the better ideas turn into dogma, and it is this process whereby a fresh, stimulating, humanly helpful idea is changed into robot dogma that is deadly.  In terms of hazardous vectors released, the transformation of ideas into dogma rivals the transformation of hydrogen into helium, uranium into lead, or innocence into corruption.  And it is nearly as relentless.

"The problem starts at the secondary level: not with the originator or developer of the idea but with the people who are attracted by it, who adopt it, who cling to it until their last nail breaks, and who invariably lack the perspective, flexibility, imagination, and, most important, sense of humor to maintain it in the spirit in which it has hatched.  Ideas are made by Masters, dogma by disciples, and the Buddha is always killed on the road….
--